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Helmet-cam video: Maydays at Bucks County, PA four-alarm apartment fire that injured seven firefighters.

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On July 15 there was a lightning sparked fire in Middletown Township, Pennsylvania at the Harper’s Crossing apartments that left seven firefighters injured. Two of the firefighters were held overnight with burns. The injuries occurred during a roof collapse shortly after the order to evacuate was given. Above is the helmet-cam from a firefighter assigned to RIT. Below is part of the description with the video:

At 1:32 a priority to activate the Rapid Intervention Team (RIT). Our rescue was assigned RIT shortly after they went responding. Our crew knew that they were not on location yet so our officer called command and we assumed RIT responsibilities. At 1:43 the first mayday was called. There were 4 firefighters on the third floor when the roof collapsed. At 2:01 the two firefighters that called the mayday jumped over the 2nd floor railing onto a small over hang and were rescued by ground ladders. at 2:08 a second mayday is declared for the remaining two firefighters. After the location is given we went to go get them. As we climb the steps to the 2nd floor stairwell one of the two firefighters is on the ground and the other one can be seen around the 2:28 mark making his way through the flaming debris down the steps.

July 16th article, Bucks Local News:

“Fire was developing in the attic area. Crews made an initial attack. When we saw they weren’t going to be able to handle the fire, we evacuated the building,” said (Langhorne-Middletown Fire Chief Frank) Farry.

“In the process of evacuating, there was a partial roof collapse. All the firefighters were able to get themselves out of the building, some through some unconventional means like jumping down an extra flight of stairs.”

The fire eventually went to four alarms as more than 100 firefighters from throughout Lower Bucks County, including Bensalem, Bristol, Falls, Middletown, Yardley-Makefield, Newtown, Northampton, Levittown, Lower Southampton and others, fought the blaze.

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TURK: A product born thanks to rapid intervention. Lt. Greg Turnell tells us more about his invention.

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Click here for contact information and to learn more about TURK

We have a new sponsor at STATter911.com this month: TURK. It’s an invention by Greg Turnell, a lieutenant and 25 year veteran with the fire department in our Nation’s Capital. Through his career Greg has been assigned to Engine 33, Rescue Squad 1, Truck 8, Engine 6, Truck 13 and Truck 11. TURK filled a need that had become evident in recent years for any company assigned to RIT on the fireground. But rather than have me explain I asked Lt. Turnell to provide a guest column about TURK. Besides giving you more info on TURK, I thought this might be helpful for any firefighter with a product they’ve come up with, or is thinking about it, to hear first hand from someone who has been in their shoes. 

TURK

“There’s got to be a better way Lieu!” ………Those words were expressed more than once when my men had to deploy the RIT basket to the front of a burning building. And generally there were a few more colorful words added to the statement. Watching four of my five man truck team navigate this 150lb basket down the street, sometimes a couple blocks, seemed impractical for several reasons:

  1. Manpower. A one person device could free manpower to run other equipment such as ladders.        
  2. Fatigue. I’d much rather have my men conserve their energy and stamina for an actual RIT deployment than exhausting themselves while hand carrying a basket down the street.                             
  3. Safety/Injury. In one incident we had a firefighter lose his footing and fall, subsequently bringing the basket and a few of his comrades down with him. 

Our new SOPS thoroughly explained our new RIT procedures and the equipment we had to have at the ready in the event a MAYDAY was declared. How we got that equipment to the building was up to us. Identifying a capability gap is an easy thing to do; it’s done every day in the sitting room of most firehouses. However, filling that gap with a viable solution is the challenge. We toyed with different methods but they all proved to be problematic and inefficient. We had to come up with a solution that was simple to put in operation and fast to deploy. Being an avid kayaker, I remember while shark fishing at Assateague one summer, spotting a fellow pulling his kayak down the beach with a device made of PVC pipe and two tires. It appeared the device was binding with the kayak holding it in place while the unit rolled down the beach atop a set of tires. It was a simple concept that I felt with a few adjustments could be emulated and applied to a stokes basket.

Several prototypes and months later I came up with a device that I patented and named the TURK. Some thought the name derived from the 1985 movie “TURK 182”with Timothy Hutton and Kim Cattrall but it was much simpler than that: Turnell. Universal. Rescue. Kart. The TURK was evaluated by the local 36 safety committee and was accepted as a practical device to be used by the DCFD. It was during the TURKs 90 day trial period that it was put to use on the METRO train accident on June 2, 2009. Faced with the dilemma of having to move heavy hydraulic tools down the track to the train, RS-2 squad wagon driver along with T-6 technician loaded 500lbs of hydraulic tools into a stokes basket. With the TURK the two were able to move the equipment approximately 1000 feet down the track bed to the train.  The TURK continues to be a proven asset on the fire ground, mass casualty incidents, and just recently in underground mines. The TURK has been a welcomed device among many fire departments and mine rescue teams because it possesses two important attributes:  it’s fast and simple. The fact that firefighters continue to discover different uses for the TURK beyond the initial intention of what the device was designed to do is testimony to its simplicity. Today, watching a team deploy the RIT basket with the TURK is uplifting. However the greatest pleasure I receive is when a firefighter or miner comes to me and says, “Hey, thanks for doing this, it makes it a lot easier”. That makes it all worthwhile.

Fireground audio: Toronto six-alarm fire with two maydays. Listen as two firefighters are rescued.

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The maydays occur at 13:00 and 15:25.

More from Firefighter Close Calls

A six-alarm fire in a vacant “heritage building” in Toronto this morning left four firefighters with relatively minor injuries. There were some tense moments after at least two maydays were sounded. The fire, in a building that suffered a partial collapse in April, was reported around 4:00 AM. Here are excerpts from an updated Montreal Gazette story:

The “intense” blaze in the three-story building under construction on the edge of the Ryerson University campus near the intersection of Yonge and Gould streets, just north of the Eaton Centre, sent three firefighters to hospital as they fought the six-alarm fire, said Toronto Fire Chief William Stewart.

Two firefighters were injured while on the roof of an adjacent building when wind gusts sent thick smoke and debris towards the men, causing them to fall approximately four metres, said Stewart.

One of the two firefighters that fell flashed his light to the firefighters that remained on the roof, and they were pulled to safety after about 15 or 20 minutes, said Toronto Fire Service division commander Lorne Buckingham.

Visibility was very low, and there was fire in the vicinity, but neither firefighter was burned, he said.

Two other firefighters were injured as they attempted to rescue the two that had fallen

Three of the injured firefighters were taken to hospital and released in good condition, while the other was treated on the scene. One of the firefighters has lower back injuries, but no fractures, said Stewart.

The roof of the brick building collapsed and much of the rest of the structure was engulfed in flames early Monday morning, said Stewart. He described the blaze as “intense” and a “horrific situation” for the more than 125 firefighters with 32 fire trucks that were dispatched to the blaze.

CTV has a series of videos

More coverage from Firegeezer & Fire Critic